Wednesday, August 30, 2006
I got the pork chop and she got the pie
So as a friend of mine described it the other day, eight bucks for a slice of my soul.
That's either a bargain or catstrophic inflation. Haven't decided yet.
***
The new Dylan is rocking my world. I loved Time Out of Mind from the start but Love and Theft took a while to catch on with me, probably because it came out September 11th, 2001. But Modern Times is maybe my favorite of this knockout run he's on. At 65.
***
Word from up north is that the chapbook looks very sharp indeed. Yay very sharp.
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Let's forgive each other darling
That's life.
***
Exit Interview should be back from the printer this week so pre-orders will get mailed ahead of the official September 15th publication date.
I'm excited to see it.
Otherwise, I'm absorbed in prep work for Notes, which I love doing.
***
Last week someone I went to high school with but didn't really know all that well emailed me: he broke his neck three years ago and is now paralyzed.
He asked if I ever lost all hope, and I didn't know what to say. My answer is no. But that's no kind of answer.
I was twelve years old. A kid. What did I know of hope then to lose it? By the time I was old enough to get my head and heart around loss, my injury was some faint shadow, ever receding.
So it was a difficult email to write. I tried my best to steer clear of the ripe cheese of inspiration, of pep, but I suspect it's still in the mix.
***
At least Dylan's new album Modern Times is great. Still deep in the swampabilly sound he's been mining for a while, it's immediately winning. The Alicia Keyes namecheck in "Thunder on the Mountain" cracks me up.
Friday, August 25, 2006
Soon your dreams will be dreaming you
When you go out to play this evening
Play with fireflies until they're gone
And then rush to meet your lover
And play with real fire until the dawn.
***
Sometimes things get so crappy, it becomes funny. Today, picture me laughing.
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
When I breeze into that city
The University of Nebraska Press wanted written verification that the 42 poems in Notes that were published in journals are mine to reprint outright. I'm almost certain that all of them have reverted back to me upon publication but I can understand why they'd want it spelled out.
That was a mind-numbing few hours. I distracted myself by stirring the pot over in Slate's forums. They've been serializing The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation. Some bozo was horrified that a comic book, his term, had been made out of such a tragedy. It's clear he hadn't picked one up since about 1950. Longtime comic book reader that I am, I couldn't let him go by unsmacked. So it became this huge discussion about what art is and what medium is and preconceived notions about both.
Of course, this went nowhere. But people have this absurd idea about September 11th and art's relationship to it, that it's too soon, too soon, too soon. I don't know what they expect, that there's an art acceptability counter ticking down implaccably somewhere, probably Area 51, and at some random time a buzzer will go off, freeing us troublesome artists because, well, now it's ok.
It's never going to be that. Art is one of things we have us humans to help us understand, grieve, remember, and heal and this notion that art has no place in these discussions, this unfolding of history, impoverishes us all.
Monday, August 21, 2006
For your consumption
It's chosen by Simone Muench, which is totally cool.
So kiss me good-bye
***
I took Ryan to see Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire at the IMAX theater for his birthday. Wow. A seventy foot high screen and 12,000 watts of power make for a stunning experience. I've seen other IMAX documentaries and came away similarly affected, but seeing a feature length film, especially one like Goblet was awesome.
Before the movie we ate at the Mellow Mushroom, out on the sidewalk. It began to rain, lightly at first so we didn't move from under the table's Coca-Cola bottlecap umbrella, but it came down harder until we were getting soaked.
***
I'm tired. I'm going to go scavenge for caffeine.
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Live-In Skin
At least I got to see a few minutes of Kristen Bell.
***
I think everything is set for Exit Interview: paper stock, cover stock, proofing, etc. It's been a lot of fun doing this. It's work I like, a different kind of creativity, the business of making an actual object instead of dorking around with words inside my head.
I think there will be a link for ordering put up later today. I'll post it when it's there.
It should be out in the next few weeks.
***
I love that place, that space, that span, before poems happen. When you feel like the ionized air just before a lightning strike.
Tuesday, August 15, 2006

It took some doing, and several false starts, almost right but not quite images, but at long last we've got the cover nailed, I believe, for my chapbook, due out next month from New Michigan Press. Here it is.
Monday, August 14, 2006
Ummmm
Sunday, August 13, 2006
Let them
***
Thought I'd found the cover image for Exit Interview but may not be able to get the image in high enough resolution. Gah. I really liked this one.
***
Birthday party today for Ryan, his dad Ray, my brother Chan. All their birthdays are this week.
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Sail on down the line
***
I mailed off two double spaced, 12 point Courrier copies of Notes to the University of Nebraska Press yesterday. The manuscript comes out huge that way, over 100 pages. They'll begin proofing the manuscript now, which is exciting.
***
The First Noble Truth is so true.
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Echo
The reservation lady was amused with my last name: "That's perfect for you to stay with us, isn't it?"
Yes, yes, it is.
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Silence
Who is this creepy little homunculus guy that's been on the Yahoo homepage all day? Why is he grinning at me? What's with the turtleneck and sweater? And the green upholstered chair. And the cheap-o wood paneling. Why is he thinking of eating my liver and making a nice little shawl out of my skin?I'm going to go hide under the couch.
Monday, August 07, 2006
I want
Yes, that's the kind of poem I want to write.
I think I will.
Sunday, August 06, 2006
Walking around in a song
***
One of my fish is dying. My oldest, six years old, which really is very respectable for a store bought comet goldfish. Kidney failure, so he's swelling up and his scales are prickling out from his body so he looks like a pinecomb. I hate this part: you'd take a dog or cat to have them put to sleep but with a fish you don't really do that. I mean, there are various suggested methods: freezing, for example, the idea being they go into shock, slowly, until they're unconscious, until they're frozen dead. Other people suggest cutting the head off. Quick, instant, not exactly clean, but decisive. I'm not going to do either so I guess it will linger, unable to regulate the amount of water in its body.
I'm down about this. I bought him out of some crappy pet store in Tuscaloosa, small, mostly white with some orange. He grew to be over six inches long with white and red patterning. I transported him back here in a water cooler, with a little battery powered air pump clipped to the side. Good grief.
***
I watched The Insider again. What a great movie.
***
There's a certain poetry magazine that took two poems from me the first time I ever sent them anything. I was amazed. One of those poems they've used for other projects. Yet everything I've sent since has been rejected, including the ones I got back yesterday. And I've sent better poems. I'm not upset. It's fine. It's just evidence of how unpredictable, unknowable, this thing is.
***
Ask me a question. Anything.
Friday, August 04, 2006
Brick
Thursday, August 03, 2006
There's rain on the road
And if offered that job, in that said time, you would have to:
- pack
- move
- find an accessible place to live, which everyone thinks is easy because they've never had to do it
- scare up a list of people interested in being a personal care attendant, of which there are at any given time in the world perhaps 14 who are suitably experienced, speak English, and only staggeringly strange
- interview them
- settle
- remember to write syllabi
- expend kilowatts of energy trying not to turn into Bill Knott.
I suck.
It took a long time to get back here
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Eyes down
CONCERN
Who knew I could be so easily changed?
Not me, looking to the beeping man
who asks how many cigarettes do I have
and if I’m a woman, really, he asks that
and the caesura of my surprise
must confirm for him the obscurity
of his suspicions. Because he’s walking
away, beeping again, like a bird
or a car unlocking for you in this heat,
in your approach. I don’t drive,
I can’t drive, and it’s now I begin dreaming
where I’d go if I did. Know
that my direction would be
wherever you are. I don’t even know.
Last night I watched the rain
while pretending to watch
a war movie with men trudging hip-deep
through snow. Specks of dust
and water frozen in their fall
towards earth, towards this place
I like to call here, I like to call February
even though it's August. No one I know pretends
likewise. One more reason
to feel a slight sadness,
one more reason to send you an email
that lies about the beauty
of
the way it accrues in silence,
the way I pretend to keep track
of each flake like a concerned parent.
Which I’m not but a vial
of heartsickness I’m closer
to being. Each day I’m asked
what I’d like to eat
and never do I know.
It’s an algebra I’ve no gift for, no gift at all.
I love the clouds for the courage
I assign them, as they empty,
as they eddy in endless jags overhead.
Maybe it’s a way to make peace
with my own foolishness
that’s currently jetting through
It never writes but I receive
its bills. It hates the cold and so do I.
Why I bother with February,
the real one in which
I ache like everyone else,
I’ll never know. In the emptied-out dawn
when the birds begin
to enunciate their insane haiku,
know that I’m awake, watching the sun turn to snow.
Pure
Listen at your own peril.
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Ankle deep
***
Later I was being chased/squirted by water-guns.
***
I can't adequately express my love for The Venture Bros. I'd never seen it until I decided to try it out on Netflix. For someone with my misspent youth filled with comic books and Saturday morning reruns of Jonny Quest (the show is even mentioned in a poem in Notes), it hits all the pleasure spots with knowing, fatal aim. The show can hit such daffy, absurd heights I can barely stand it. I love the ever-thwarted Monarch, his neuroses. Great show.
***
C. Dale has a good post on Keats today, something I've thought about before. Go check it out.

